4.5 Article

Seed dispersal by wind decreases when plants are water-stressed, potentially counteracting species coexistence and niche evolution

期刊

ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
卷 11, 期 22, 页码 16239-16249

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.8305

关键词

Anemochory; community dynamics; context-dependent seed dispersal; drought; source-sink dynamics; water logging

资金

  1. Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst [57165010]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [DFG--WA 3442/3--1]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32171870]
  4. Special Funds for Fundamental Research in Central Public Research Institutes [CAFYBB2019MA004]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The distribution of plant species along hydrological gradients depends on both hydrological niches and seed dispersal, with a general positive relationship between seed production and dispersal distance. Different plant species show species-specific responses to hydrological conditions, influencing seed production, dispersal traits, and predicted dispersal distances. This context-dependent seed dispersal may impact species coexistence and evolutionary niche conservatism.
Hydrology is a major environmental factor determining plant fitness, and hydrological niche segregation (HNS) has been widely used to explain species coexistence. Nevertheless, the distribution of plant species along hydrological gradients does not only depend on their hydrological niches but also depend on their seed dispersal, with dispersal either weakening or reinforcing the effects of HNS on coexistence. However, it is poorly understood how seed dispersal responds to hydrological conditions. To close this gap, we conducted a common-garden experiment exposing five wind-dispersed plant species (Bellis perennis, Chenopodium album, Crepis sancta, Hypochaeris glabra, and Hypochaeris radicata) to different hydrological conditions. We quantified the effects of hydrological conditions on seed production and dispersal traits, and simulated seed dispersal distances with a mechanistic dispersal model. We found species-specific responses of seed production, seed dispersal traits, and predicted dispersal distances to hydrological conditions. Despite these species-specific responses, there was a general positive relationship between seed production and dispersal distance: Plants growing in favorable hydrological conditions not only produce more seeds but also disperse them over longer distances. This arises mostly because plants growing in favorable environments grow taller and thus disperse their seeds over longer distances. We postulate that the positive relationship between seed production and dispersal may reduce the concentration of each species to the environments favorable for it, thus counteracting species coexistence. Moreover, the resulting asymmetrical gene flow from favorable to stressful habitats may slow down the microevolution of hydrological niches, causing evolutionary niche conservatism. Accounting for context-dependent seed dispersal should thus improve ecological and evolutionary models for the spatial dynamics of plant populations and communities.

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